A sold-out Indy 500 packed with
drama, from firings to Larson's double to Newgarden threepeat bid
[May 24, 2025]
By JENNA FRYER
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — There has been so much drama ahead of the 109th
running of the Indianapolis 500 that Kyle Larson's attempt to
complete the 1,100-mile NASCAR double doesn't even crack the top
attention-getters.
Roger Penske's credibility was tested this week and he fired the top
three executives of his IndyCar team because the cars of two-time
defending race winner Josef Newgarden and Will Power failed
inspection. The team had modified a spec safety part — something
IndyCar insists provided no competitive advantage — and it forced
Penske to act.
The second major infraction in just over a year at Team Penske put
The Captain's reputation at stake. He owns his team but also IndyCar,
the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the Indy 500 — the most
important race in the world to him, and one that the 88-year-old
Penske has won a record 20 times.
“We had an organizational failure not once but two times. It hurts
me in my gut,” Penske told new TV partner Fox Sports. “There’s a
certain amount of credibility you have to have. We let people down.
We’ll move on and our goal is to win the race.”
The grandstands are sold out for the first time since 2016 and the
Indy 500 is slated to run hours before the Indiana Pacers host Game
3 of the Eastern Conference finals a few miles away. The speedway is
expecting 350,000 people will attend.

“The downside is that most of the talk going into our biggest race
of the year is about that,” 2008 Indy 500 winner Scott Dixon said of
the Team Penske scandal. “There’s so many cool stories going into
it.”
First Israeli driver will lead field
Robert Shwartzman will become the first Israeli driver in the 33-car
field when he leads it to the green as the first rookie pole-winner
since 1983. The 25-year-old is both Russian and Israeli, though he
races under the Israeli flag.
He won the pole with Italian team Prema Racing, a dominant European
organization that this season expanded to IndyCar. Shwartzman has
never before raced on an oval and will start alongside two-time
winner Takuma Sato and Pato O'Ward, who lost to Newgarden on the
last lap year.
Shwartzman has been embraced by the crowd in Indianapolis.
“It’s been since the moment I felt like we were fast and people
start noticing us that we were actually not too bad, we’re pretty
competitive, it started picking up this level of people just,
cheering, cheering, cheering,” Shwartzman said. “When we took the
pole, it’s unbelievable, the roar, how loud it is. It’s been a long
time since I heard that.”
What about the Penske cars?
The three Team Penske cars did not participate in the final day of
qualifying. Scott McLaughlin crashed earlier that day, before
Newgarden and Power were disqualified, and his car did not have the
illegally altered piece on it.
McLaughlin will start 10th and is motivated to help Penske repair
the team image. Newgarden, seeking to become the first driver to win
Indy in three consecutive years, will start 32nd and Power in the
final spot following the penalties.
No driver has ever won from the last row but Newgarden believes it
can be done. The field won't be surprised.
“The Penskes are freaking missiles,” O'Ward said. “It's going to be
fun watching Josef carve his way through traffic.”
[to top of second column] |

Pato O'Ward, of Mexico, waves to fans before the start of practice
for the Indianapolis 500 auto race at the Indianapolis Motor
Speedway in Indianapolis, Monday, May 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Michael
Conroy)

O'Ward's takeover
The Mexican driver has become IndyCar's superstar, and he has twice
had his heart broken at Indy with runner-up finishes. O'Ward's
third-place starting position is the best of his career and momentum
for a victory has been building.
His energy vibrates around the speedway, where his purchasing of a
bomber jacket at the infield merchandise tent caused the item to
sell out online and boost Indianapolis-brand Homefield to a national
level. There were only five jackets, all size XL, still available
Friday morning.
O'Ward also got the Indiana Dairy Association to bring a cow to the
speedway Friday so he could milk it — a rookie tradition at the Indy
500 that he missed because his first appearance was during the
pandemic.
“We need more guys like Pato in NASCAR,” said Larson, his Arrow
McLaren teammate at Indy.
Hole in the resume
Alex Palou has won four of the first five IndyCar races this season
but has flown under the radar this month. The Spaniard will start
sixth. His best finish is second and he's been inside the top nine
the last four years.
Palou is the two-time reigning IndyCar champion and has three titles
in the last four years. He admitted if he never wins the Indy 500,
his career would not be complete — and the 14-race winner has yet to
earn a victory on an oval.
“In that race, you don’t think about the championship at all,” Palou
said. “A third place is not good enough. A second place is not good
enough. It’s only first that counts."
Larson doing The Double
The NASCAR star is attempting to complete the Indianapolis 500 and
the Coca-Cola 600 in North Carolina on Sunday, an accomplishment
that he fell short of last year because of rain.
A long delay in Indianapolis made Larson late to Charlotte Motor
Speedway, and the race had not only started by the time he arrived
but been stopped by rain. He didn't turn a single lap of the NASCAR
leg.
He's not shown the same speed at Indy as he did a year ago, and
being teammates with O'Ward has dulled some of the spotlight on him.
Larson will make the NASCAR race his priority.

“I feel like I get a lot of attention in everything that I do and
race, and I don’t really like that because I feel like it takes away
from the spotlight of others,” Larson said. “This year has been
better because I feel like I’ve kind of flown under the radar. Last
year I felt, like, crazy. It’s been more normal, and I like it that
way.”
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